CommentRe:Finally (Score 1)139
Tell us you're an a$$hole without telling us you're an a$$hole.
Tell us you're an a$$hole without telling us you're an a$$hole.
I would be all-in but for the lack of all wheel drive.
No self-driving? Good! That's a $4,000 option I don't care to pay for.
The Bitstream Font Collection included with CorelDRAW! and later versions of WordPerfect included around 80% pirated fonts. The fonts had glyphs and geometry data that was exactly the same but only the font names in the TTF files were changed.
It was called the biggest font heist in computing history.
I have the ELECOM, Kensington Orbit, and other workalikes. The Trackman is just a better trackball even if it's missing the scrolly wheel.
Just bring back the Trackman Marble mouse already.
That ship has sailed. I've moved to Proxmox.
I read the article and noticed he had written a MIPS emulator in ARM assembly but I didn't realize that ARM still makes chips that don't have MMUs.
I'm curious: Why emulate MIPS? Why not just run ARM on ARM or MIPS on MIPS natively?
After many years of being "out of stock" at $5 per bottle it is suddenly available now for $15 per 5 oz. bottle. That's an absurdly high price for any hot sauce, let alone one produced by a video game cheater.
Most people think he did cheat, but most didn't dare bring it up in official language lest they catch a lawsuit.
Fair or not, I'm not paying $15 for a tiny 5 oz. bottle of hot sauce from anyone.
My Honda's optional lane-keeping feature is pretty good. So is the on-by-default road and lane departure features along with automatic emergency braking. Adaptive cruise control is a godsend. Parking proximity warnings and backup cross-traffic alerts are very useful.
Are you saying these features should all be deleted?
LIDAR should be required by law for "autonomously" driving cars.
The Tesla crashing into the Wile E Coyote painted tunnel is even more proof of this.
No. They are running Windows.
Answer the question next time, perhaps?
If the code and the comments disagree, then both are probably wrong. -- Norm Schryer